the worst example seems to be the case where someone said that they'd overclock their unit using provided software and if it failed, would return it to OpenPandora and not tell them it had been overclocked.

Craigx's response, which might be humour, but might be serious:

Quote:

"So you're a dishonest little s**t too?

I want your order number. You are banned from having a Pandora from us.

i like the dingoo a320 well cheap and works very fast too ,i think pandora is too expensive its only 200mhz faster and u wouldnt notice playing emu,s on the dingo.

Well, there's not just the "200mhz" that you'll need to worry about - last I looked, the Dingoo didn't have the DSP or GFX hardware. But emulation issues aside (and how do you emulate an Amiga properly without a keyboard?) there's also the full desktop experience with the Pandora too - it can run firefox and productivity software with ease.

Quite why you'd want to do anything other than emulate on it is beyond me though!

I played a bit with a Dingo at a friend's house a few weeks ago emulating some SNES stuff, and it was nice. Dingo is well suited, and priced, for what it's meant to do, which certainly isn't either firefoxing or openofficcing, you know.

Other than that, it must be said, Dingo is a device that actually exits so you can actually use and, in that sense, it can't compete against Pandora's most unique feature... (will always be two months away )

Heavy on the [num]keys, like flight sims maybe? Both were nice games btw

It's a while since I played it, but yes - it was far too heavy on the keys to be played on facebuttons/shoulder buttons. Thankfully, those sorts of games were few and far between; the majority were joystick with maybe the spacebar. Still, will be nice to get a decent handheld Amiga emulation going, with a CPU that can do it some justice.